Jonathan Golfman '03 is VP, Head of Film Business & Legal Affairs at Media Rights Capital. "You need to find your way, and you may need to make sacrifices. But it's worth it to do what you love doing."

Innocence Project News

Fox Detroit - "These kinds of cases are different they have to be adjudicated outside of bankruptcy," said Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project. "And we're really open to trying to resolve this so that Walter and everybody else can move on with their lives."

USA Today - The National Academy of Sciences released a groundbreaking report Thursday that provides strong scientific confirmation and explanation of what we've long known about the reliability of eyewitness identifications: They're not nearly as reliable as we'd like to think.

Philadelphia Inquirer - Nina Morrison, senior staff attorney at the Innocence Project at Yeshiva University's Benjamin N. Cardozo Law School in New York City, called the news "wonderful. We've been working for this for nine years."

New York Law Journal - "Training lawyers in the latest in forensic science means we are creating a network of public defenders who are better armed in the courtroom and more prepared to win their case," said Barry Scheck, cofounder of the Innocence Project, which is housed at Cardozo. "

Cardozo alumna Rachel Pecker '13 worked on the case as a student and intern in the Innocence Project. Here, she recounts her experience on the case, and what it was like to be there when Morton was freed.